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Africana in the Indexes*

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 May 2014

Yvette Scheven*
Affiliation:
University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign

Extract

Hartwig and O'Barr state in The Student Africanist's Handbook that

Students of African affairs are poorly served by standard indexing services in the respective disciplines. Too many periodicals devoted to Africa are simply not indexed in the standard reference works.

This paper is the result of a study carried out in late summer 1976, to determine how well that statement stands. My approach was to go directly to the indexes (in the social sciences and humanities) to learn how many Africanist journals are actually indexed, and how well Africana materials are covered.

For this study “index” is interpreted in its broadest sense: any bibliographic list arranged in some order to allow a subject approach. Therefore, abstracts and bibliographies were included, as well as current contents and advanced contents indexes, in addition to the more “traditional” indexes, but machine-readable data banks were excluded. Also, I sought indexes that are current and that appear on a regular basis, at least annually. 1975 volumes (or the most recent) were used for comparison.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © African Studies Association 1977

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Footnotes

*

This is an abbreviated version of the paper presented at the African Studies Association annual meeting, Boston, Mass., 4 Nov. 1976.

References

Notes

1. Hartwig, Gerald W. and O'Barr, William M., The Student Africanist's Handbook: A Guide to Resources. (Cambridge, Mass.: 1974), p. 40.Google Scholar

2. Since this paper was written, Kroniek van Afrika has announced it will change its frequency to semi-annual under the title African Perspectives.